Breaking Waves: Ocean News

09/22/2024 - 05:52
AA says capital’s streets are ‘paved with fines’ as figures show £89m was received in 2023-24 Transport for London (TfL) has recorded a 57% rise in income over five years from fining drivers using major roads in the capital, with a leading motoring organisation saying the transport authority has ensured London’s streets are now “paved with fines”. Figures show it received £89.3m in the 2023-24 financial year for perceived offences on its red route network, up from £56.8m in 2018-19, according to a draft version of its next annual report seen by the PA news agency. Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 22:37
‘It will cost more, it will push prices up, it will take longer,’ treasurer says of opposition leader’s ‘fantasy’ Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Coalition plans to build seven nuclear power plants are “economic insanity”, Jim Chalmers has said, in the lead-up to a speech by Peter Dutton that is expected to provide new details of the policy. The federal opposition has outlined plans to build seven nuclear reactors across five states, should it win the next election, with the first to be built by 2035 to 2037 at the earliest. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 15:00
Exclusive: independent MPs and Lidia Thorpe tell PM that environment law reforms under negotiation must remove exemptions for native forest logging Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Independent MPs and a crossbench senator are trying to increase the pressure on the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, to remove Howard-era exemptions that allow native forest logging to operate outside national environment laws. The government has been negotiating over reforms to the laws in the Senate, where the Greens and crossbenchers David Pocock and Lidia Thorpe have been pushing for an end to the exemptions for logging covered by regional forest agreements. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 14:00
The Marshall Project and the Prison Journalism Project asked incarcerated reporters to document the impact of extreme heat on their facilities. Their stories reveal the brutal reality After a summer of record-breaking temperatures, scientists predict that 2024 could end up being the hottest year on record. For people in US prisons and jails – who often lack access to even the most basic cooling measures – conditions behind bars exacerbate the risks of dangerously high temperatures. Several courts have ruled that extreme temperatures in prison violate the eighth amendment’s provision against “cruel and unusual” punishment. But these rulings have not led to a widespread adoption of air-conditioning or other methods to cool prison facilities or prevent heat-related deaths. Public health researchers at Brown University estimate that just one day of above-average summer temperatures is associated with a nearly 4% increase in deaths of incarcerated people. Suicides spike 23% in the three days following a heatwave. And for every 10 degrees Fahrenheit above the average summer temperature, those deaths increase by 5%. Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 13:00
Showing climate delivery can be done effectively and fairly would be an extraordinary climate legacy for Keir Starmer A well-intentioned but badly designed and poorly communicated energy policy from the German government, and more recent protests by farmers in France and the Netherlands, have knocked the confidence of European political leaders that environmental progress can be delivered in a way that works for people and enjoys democratic support. Unashamedly popular climate policies from Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves and Ed Miliband offer the chance to reshape European climate politics and confound these sceptics. Showing climate delivery can be done fairly, effectively, affordably and with strong public support would be an extraordinary climate legacy for Starmer. It would build on Britain’s relatively strong record of having halved its climate footprint already, and it would offer hope amid all the gloom. Joss Garman is executive director of the European Climate Foundation Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 08:45
One person dead and several missing after deluge in Noto, still recovering from 1 January earthquake Heavy rain pounded Japan’s north-central Noto region, triggering landslides and floods and leaving one person dead and several missing, officials have said. The deluges caused swollen rivers to overflow, flooding homes and leaving some people stranded in a region still recovering from the deadly 1 January earthquake. Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 06:07
Ecover, backed by activist model Lily Cole, calls for fewer washes to reduce microplastics and other sources of water pollution A company that sells cleaning products is giving customers some surprising advice: wash your clothes less. Ecover is calling for a change in our laundry habits after research found people felt under societal pressure to wash their clothes more frequently, and were unaware that this could damage the environment. Continue reading...
09/21/2024 - 01:00
Though the party has plenty to celebrate at its first conference in power for 15 years, there is much work to do to on net zero When Keir Starmer arrives in Liverpool this weekend promising an upbeat tone to Labour’s first conference in power for 15 years, he will boast of his party’s strong start to its first 82 days in government. In just the last two months, the new government has made more green reforms than Rishi Sunak did in his entire premiership and Labour has plenty to celebrate: it has taken the first steps to crack down on water companies and clean up our filthy rivers; stopping oil and gas licences, and withdrawing support for a new coalmine; setting up a new renewable company, Great British Energy; a green light for new on and offshore windfarms; and an international charm offensive to signal renewed UK leadership in climate and nature diplomacy; alongside a host of smaller changes. Continue reading...
09/20/2024 - 23:00
Guardian Australia’s photographer-at-large Mike Bowers captures a burst of yellow on NSW’s south-west slopes Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Continue reading...
09/20/2024 - 13:45
Environment agency advised that the animal posed a danger to elderly woman in remote summer house in Westfjords A rare polar bear that was spotted in a remote village in Iceland was shot by police after being considered a threat, authorities have said. The bear was killed in the north-west tip of the country after police consulted the national environment agency, which declined to have the animal relocated, according to the Westfjords police chief, Helgi Jensson. Continue reading...